What’s in a Face?: Facial Cues Facilitate Emotion-Word Learning in 14-month-old Infants
Abstract
Emotion learning, the process through which humans understand their own and others’
affective states, allows infants to communicate and bond with others. Infants use
facial expressions as external indicators of these internal states during the learning
process. The present study seeks to investigate previous findings, which found that
14-month-olds could not form word-emotional expression links when presented with video
stimuli of human faces making happy and sad expressions, yet these infants could form
these associations when presented with video of cartoon faces. Did these infants need
different cues to make label-expression combinations in the human face condition?
In the current study, we tested the hypothesis that these infants need facial stimuli
to say or emit the word in order for them to recruit skills for word-learning, versus
a voiceover label in previous studies. Fourteen-month-old infants (N = 32) were habituated
to label-expression combinations and then tested with one combination from the habituation
phase and one with changed relations or a “switch” event. Average looking times (in
seconds) for the two conditions, Emitted label stimuli and voiceover label stimuli
(Non-emitted), were compared. The results show that infants looked significantly longer
at the novel “switch” combination relative to the "same" trial (p = .02) in the Emitted
condition, while the difference for the Non-emitted condition was not significant
(p =.60). Infants in the Emitted condition successfully recognized novel expression-label
associations, and thus labels emitted from a face facilitated word learning. For emotion-word
learning, these unique naturalistic cues may be necessary.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
Psychology and NeurosciencePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/18360Citation
Ferrans, Morgan (2019). What’s in a Face?: Facial Cues Facilitate Emotion-Word Learning in 14-month-old Infants.
Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/18360.Collections
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